Antonio Conte sacked.

The 48-year-old Italian, who returned to pre-season training this week, had one year remaining on his contract.

Conte won the Premier League in his first season and the FA Cup in May, but the team finished fifth in the league last season, missing out on Champions League qualification.

Ex-Napoli manager Maurizio Sarri is expected to succeed his compatriot at Stamford Bridge.

Should Sarri be appointed, he would be Chelsea’s ninth full-time manager since Roman Abramovich bought the club in 2003.

During three years with Napoli, Sarri did not win a major honour but guided the club to second, third and second again – behind Juventus in 2017-18. The former Empoli manager was named Serie A Coach of the Year in 2016-17.

Chelsea announced on Friday that Conte had “parted company” with the club, with a two-line statement that ended: “We wish Antonio every success in his future career.”

For the sixth time in eight seasons the Premier League’s title-winning manager has left his job by the following summer – if not earlier.

Conte has a clause in his contract that guarantees him a pay-off, thought to be £9m, for the final year of his deal.

The club’s Premier League opener is away at Huddersfield on 11 August.

Conte’s Chelsea record

Only Pep Guardiola has a better win percentage than Antonio Conte in Premier League history

Conte’s 30 league wins in the 2016-17 campaign was a record until Manchester City produced 32 in 2017-18.

He set a club record 13 consecutive league victories.

His league win percentage of 67.1% is better than Sir Alex Ferguson’s 65.2% and only bettered by Pep Guardiola’s 72.8% in the Premier League.

He averaged 2.14 points per game in the league. Only Ferguson (2.16) and Guardiola (2.34) have averaged more in the competition’s history

He won 69 and drew 20 of his 106 games in charge of the club.

Conte pays for stop-start campaign

Conte’s win percentage in all competitions is the best of any Chelsea boss to have managed over 100 games in the Premier League

Conte’s future was under scrutiny even as his side beat Manchester United to lift the FA Cup in May, but he remained in place at the club.

However, his exit has been anticipated all summer after the Blues missed out on Champions League qualification.

The FA Cup win means Conte – who managed Juventus from 2011 to 2014 – has won a major trophy in each of his past five seasons as a club manager.

The 2017-18 campaign proved a fractious one for the west London club. Conte was outspoken about the congested festive fixture list and at times visibly agitated in news conferences when questioned about a public row with Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho.

Chelsea ultimately finished 30 points behind Premier League champions Manchester City and exited the Champions League at the last-16 stage after a 4-1 aggregate defeat by Barcelona.

In mid-October, the Blues were beaten by a Crystal Palace side who had gone into the match with no points from seven games, prompting Conte to dismiss rumours of unrest over his training schedule.

They suffered back-to-back league defeats twice after Christmas – first by Bournemouth and Watford, and then against Manchester City and Manchester United – and a run of four straight victories late in the campaign could not secure a top-four finish.

Hardest job in football?

Russian billionaire Abramovich took control of Chelsea in June 2003, with Claudio Ranieri – the future title-winning manager with Leicester – already in charge.

Ranieri lasted less than 12 months into Abramovich’s reign, and was sacked in May 2004 after almost four years at the club. No manager has lasted that long since.

Like a number of his predecessors, Conte has been dismissed the season after winning a major trophy.

Silverware not enough at Stamford Bridge

Jose Mourinho: Premier League 04-05, 05-06, FA Cup 06-07, League Cup 04-05, 06-07. Left club on 20 September 2007